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Communities and Other Social Actors: Rethinking Commodities and Consumption in Global Historical Archaeologyby: Lynda Carroll
International Journal of Historical Archaeology, Vol. 3, No. 3. (1 September 1999), pp. 131-136.
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AbstractThe relationships between people and commodities, and the processes through which goods are entangled with people's lives can be better understood with a focus on the community. The concept of community offers a way to understand the entanglement of individuals and small groups with global processes. In addition, a focus on the community allows historical archaeologists a scale of analysis to consider the links between people, communities, and global networks of exchange, as commodities are exchanged in and out of local, regional, or global arenas.
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